On May 5, 2015, Ripple received a US$700,000 civil penalty from the U.S. Treasury's
Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) for "willful violation of the
Bank Secrecy Act by acting as a money services business without registering with FinCEN". The company agreed to remedial steps to ensure future compliance, including an agreement to only transact XRP and "Ripple Trade" activity through registered
money services businesses (MSB), among other agreements such as enhancing the Ripple Protocol. In September 2017,
blockchain startup R3 sued Ripple for specific performance of an option agreement in which Ripple agreed to sell up to five billion XRPs (the native
cryptocurrency of Ripple protocol) for a price of $.0085. Ripple countersued, claiming that R3 reneged on a number of contractual promises, and was simply acting in a spirit of opportunism, after the cryptocurrency increased in value more than 30 times. In September 2018, Ripple and R3 reached an undisclosed settlement agreement. In February 2020 an article in Financial Times Alphaville revealed that MoneyGram, the largest public user of Ripple's XRP based liquidity tools, had received a $50m investment prior to adopting the tools and also that the software was provided free of charge by Ripple and that MoneyGram was receiving an on-going subsidy for using XRP, amounting to $8.9m in Q4 2019. The same article revealed that Ripple was dependent on sales of XRP to remain profitable. On December 22, 2020, the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged Ripple and two of its executives with violating investor protection laws, filing suit in the
United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. The SEC alleged that Ripple, co-founder Christian Larsen and CEO Bradley Garlinghouse, raised more than $1.3 billion through an unregistered securities offering. The government agency brought charges against Ripple for depriving the “potential purchasers [of XRP] of adequate disclosures about XRP and Ripple’s business and other important long-standing protections that are fundamental to our robust public market system,” according to the complaint that the SEC filed in federal district court in Manhattan, New York. In April 2021, Judge Sarah Netburn granted a motion from Garlinghouse and Larsen to dismiss the SEC's subpoenas for access to eight years' of banking records, referring to the request as a "wholly inappropriate overreach." The defendants agreed to turn over all data involving XRP transactions. In July 2023, the district court ruled on the SEC lawsuit, finding that the XRP token sold by Ripple Labs was not a security. However, if sold in institutional sales, or used as a fundraiser, such actions could be classified as a security in those circumstances. More specifically, the programmatic sales of XRP on public
cryptocurrency exchanges do not meet the third prong of the
Howey Test, so subsequent sales by exchanges are not securities. Judge
Analisa Torres issued a
summary judgement in the case after over two years of litigation between the SEC and Ripple. In October, the SEC announced that it would be dropping their lawsuit against Brad Garlinghouse and Chris Larsen. In June 2024, Ripple's legal chief Stuart Alderoty said that the company has spent over $100 million defending itself in litigation brought by the SEC. In 2024, a judge ordered Ripple Labs to pay a $125 million penalty for securities violations. ==Political activities==